沃顿之前(和之后不久)的世界

S. Conn
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摘要

本章探讨了为什么美国的教育领袖和商人首先认为建立商学院是一个好主意。当时通常给出的答案是,到20世纪之交,美国商业本身已经变得如此庞大和复杂,现在需要一种新的大学水平的教育来适应新的管理工作领域。然而,更有力的理由是,商人想要大学学位带来的社会地位和文化声望。这一章接着介绍了宾夕法尼亚大学沃顿金融与经济学院,该学院成立于1881年,是美国第一所商学院。近一个半世纪以来成立的600多所商学院都是沃顿商学院的后裔。
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The World before (and Shortly after) Wharton
This chapter examines why educational leaders and businessmen in the United States thought it was a good idea to establish business schools in the first place. The answer often offered at the time was that American business itself had grown so big and complex by the turn of the twentieth century that a new university-level education was now required for the new world of managerial work. However, the more powerful rationale was that businessmen wanted the social status and cultural cachet that came with a university degree. The chapter then looks at the Wharton School of Finance and Economy at the University of Pennsylvania, which was founded in 1881 and became the first business school in the United States. All of the more than six hundred business schools founded in the nearly century and a half since descend from Wharton.
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Acknowledgments 3. Dismal Science versus Applied Economics: The Unhappy Relationship between Business Schools and Economics Departments 1. The World before (and Shortly after) Wharton: Getting a Business Education in the Nineteenth Century 5. Good in a Crisis? How Business Schools Responded to Economic Downturns—or Didn’t Introduction: The Beast That Ate Campus
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